Probing Real-Space and Time-Resolved Correlation Functions with Many-Body Ramsey Interferometry
ORAL
Abstract
We propose to use Ramsey interferometry and single-site addressability, available in synthetic matter such as cold atoms, polar molecules, or trapped ions, to measure real-space and time resolved spin correlation functions. These correlation functions directly probe the excitations of the system, which makes it possible to characterize the underlying many-body states. Moreover, they contain valuable information about phase transitions where they exhibit scale invariance. We explicitly consider examples of the two-dimensional, antiferromagnetic Heisenberg model and the one-dimensional, long-range transverse field Ising model to illustrate the technique.
–
Authors
-
Michael Knap
Harvard University
-
Adrian Kantian
University of Geneva
-
Thierry Giamarchi
University of Geneva, DPMC-MaNEP, University of Geneva
-
Immanuel Bloch
Max-Planck-Institut f\"ur Quantenoptik
-
Mikhail D. Lukin
Harvard University
-
Eugene Demler
Harvard University, Department of Physics, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138, USA